
Blonde Venus, 1932

images that haunt us


Shirley Temple imitating Marlene Dietrich’s âHot Voodooâ number from Blonde Venus (1932), probably ca. 1935.
Marlene Dietrich in Blonde Venus, directed by Josef von Sternberg, 1932 / src: reflections-on-blonde-venus
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Marlene Dietrich in Blonde Venus wearing her outfit for the âHot Voodooâ dance, directed by Josef von Sternberg, 1932 / src: IMDb and Film Forum
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Marlene Dietrich in Blonde Venus, directed by Josef von Sternberg, 1932 / src: reflections-on-blonde-venus
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Here, Helen (Marlene Dietrich) as
in the truly freaky and berserk âHot Voodooâ dance. It plays like a pagan, taboo and primitive beauty and the beast-style ritual, with Dietrich as an albino goddess or priestess shedding her gorilla fur disguise. Â All these decades later âHot Voodooâ is still deliriously weird, and perhaps the first incidence of deliberate, knowing camp in popular culture. (Itâs easy to imagine von Sternberg and Dietrich looking at each other across the camera and thinking, âCan you believe weâre getting away with this?â), 1932 / src:Â reflections-on-blonde-venus
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Shirley Temple imitating Marlene Dietrich’s âHot Voodooâ number from Blonde Venus (1932), probably ca. 1935.
Marlene Dietrich in Blonde Venus, directed by Josef von Sternberg, 1932 / src: IMDbÂ
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Iâve always been curious about the above photo when it appears online or in books: itâs clearly an entirely different outfit to the black sequinned one Dietrich wears onscreen in âHot Voodoo.â Is this shot a âwardrobe testâ of a potential costume that got rejected? In his book, Bach provides a clue: production of Blonde Venus was a long rancorous ordeal with Sternberg (and Dietrich) feuding with studio heads. (At one point Paramount threatened to sack Sternberg and replace him with another director). There were so many script re-shuffles that âmajor sequences (including the âHot Voodooâ number) were completely recostumed and reshot.â So, the famous version of âHot Voodooâ weâre all familiar with is actually the second reshot version. This pic above was presumably what Dietrich wore in the original scrapped number that was resigned to the cutting room floor. / source:Â graham-russellÂ
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Don English ::
Marlene Dietrich in Blonde Venus, directed by Josef von Sternberg, here posing in her outfit for the âHot Voodooâ dance, 1932 © Bridgeman Images
/ src: Maison Européene de la Photographie
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